No Turning Back: Crusaders 100th Anniversary Concert

Royal Albert Hall, London, event review by George Luke

Crusaders at
Royal Albert Hall

The opportunity to see Delirious?, Tim Vine and Yfriday on
the same stage (and still be home in time for the Eurovision Song
Contest) wasn't one to turn down. So on the afternoon of Saturday 20th
May, I headed off to the Royal Albert Hall to join Crusaders in
celebrating their centenary. I arrived two hours before the show was
due to start and was ushered backstage for a chat with Crusaders' head
guy Matt Summerfield and a few of the participating acts (including
the most surreal interview I've ever done - with Tim Vine). As I was
running about in the basement trying to find the gents' loo, I could
hear Beth Tysall opening the show by singing "How Great Thou Art"
acappella.

I took my seat in one of the boxes in time to see thebandwithnoname
going through their set. As expected, it was pretty high-octane stuff.
The new band members acquitted themselves well and Chip K looked
rather scary with a massive black blob underneath each eye. Two
elderly men sitting in the same box as me told me that they'd been
involved with the Crusaders since the '50s and attended their 50th
anniversary celebration at the same venue we were in now. They seemed
to be enjoying the music as much as I did - although one admitted to
turning his hearing aid off when it got too loud for him!

Following a couple of congratulatory video messages, it was time for
some comic relief from John Archer and Tim Vine. The pair indulged in
a little light-hearted rivalry around whether comedy was better than
magic, or vice versa. John performed "the most dangerous trick ever!"
(swallowing a balloon), while Tim treated us to his trademark barrage
of puns and wisecracks. The bit where they went through a list of
denominations and asked any members present to raise their hands was
particularly funny - but I know from experience that some jokes do
fall flat when you try to reproduce them in print, so I won't go
through it all here. I will give you Tim's punchline, though: "Any
Mormons in? Keep your hands up - Security!"

The Lacey Theatre Company followed
John's and Tim's wisecracks with a performance of Rob Lacey's The
Poisoned Pool: an analogy of the story of Christ coming to earth,
drawing from images of Christ as an artist, painting the world. Like
many others, I was saddened by the news of Rob's death in April, so
this part of the show was a particularly poignant moment for me, and I
was glad to hear that they intend to carry on performing and have a
wealth of material Rob left behind. While I found The Poisoned Pool to
be a very thought-provoking, well-performed piece, on the whole I felt
that the few female acts on the bill just didn't seem to grab the
audience the way the blokes did. Blush suffered more from this than
the Lacey Company did - but I'm going through the acts in
chronological order, so I'll get to them later.

A few more congratulatory video messages - from Steve Chalke and Sir
Cliff - and then a montage of human rights icons from around the world
set to T-Rex's "Children Of The Revolution" heralded Yfriday's entry.
They rocked - especially when they did "Revolution" - but were only
onstage for 20 minutes. Not fair!

A small section of the Psalm
Drummers (minus founder Terl Bryant) kicked off the second half. Then
after a few more video messages, Blush took to the stage. Somehow
Blush seemed out of their depth, despite their best efforts. But they
did have a fantastic testimony of Jess' knee being healed; they even
showed us the cast her leg had been in all week as evidence. More
comic relief came from Steve Legg, who kept us amused with witty
banter as he prepared for his attempt to break Harry Houdini's record
for escaping from a straitjacket. Houdini did it in over two minutes;
Steve managed it in 39 seconds, to rapturous applause.

Tommy Baker did some juggling tricks with basketballs, a 100th
birthday message from the Queen was read out, and then it was time for
the headline act, Delirious?. From the opening guitar riff of "Here I
Am, Send Me", Martin and the D Boys had the audience eating out of
their hands. "Rain Down", "Solid Rock" and "Miracle Maker" followed.
Martin Smith reminisced about how a team from their local Crusaders
group would always beat his church youth team at table tennis. Even
when the band brought all their wives and children out onto the stage,
it didn't get mushy like I feared it would. "Miracle Maker" segued
neatly into "History Maker", and the band left us with the strains of
"Our God Reigns" ringing in our ears.

Thanks, Crusaders, for a memorable afternoon. Here's to another 100
years under your new name, Urban Saints.and respect to the bloke in
the black T-shirt in the front row, who outdanced all the bands that
appeared on stage.

The opinions expressed in this article are
not necessarily those held by Cross Rhythms. Any expressed
views were accurate at the time of publishing but may or may
not reflect the views of the individuals concerned at a
later date.

An fantastic day - pretty much agree with the reviewers
comments. YFriday were excellent and I could have seen alot
more from them. The song everlasting God is awesome and has
left me wanting more! Delirious well stole the show and I
totally agree about the bloke in the black T-shirt - You
rocked mate!!!!

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